Story of White Coat: Indecent Acts is the second nurse centric film released in Impulse’s long running Nikkatsu Erotic Films Collection. And like it’s predecessor, it’s mostly a light comedy with some strange tonal shifts at about the half-way point. This film also has some rape issues it needs to work out. Unlike the previous film though, it is actually a step in the right direction I suppose.

The film begins with Junior being admitted into a hospital. Somehow (the film doesn’t waste any time explaining) he’s gotten his wiener stuck in some woman’s pussy. They give him a shot and somehow unhook the two. While recovering, with his faithful chauffeur in tow, Junior spots our protagonist, Shinobu (Mina Asami of Female Prisoner: Caged). Right then and there he tries to force himself on her. Eventually another female nurse steps in to save the poor girl (by fucking Junior herself). Junior though isn’t satisfied and makes it his mission to sleep with Shinobu any way he can. Meanwhile, his chauffeur has also fallen for the girl.

The film, for about the first half hour, is a mostly episodic, light sex comedy. It’s hard to take a movie too seriously when it begins with two people getting stuck while having sex (according to sex comedies, my main source of sex education, this is a common occurrence). But things change when Junior finally get Shinobu alone. He forces himself on the girl and we get a long, protracted scene with lots of screaming. Of course, this being a Nikkatsu sex film, the girl eventually gets off. Where this film seems to deviate though is that she spends the rest of the film calling herself an idiot and wandering around in a haze. She feels bad that she enjoyed it. She knows that she shouldn’t have and it tears her up. So, you know, at least they were trying to take a stab at real human emotion. Still, the end result is the same. The first half of the film though is a lot of fun.

Like all the previous films in the series, Story of White Coat: Indecent Acts looks great on DVD. It’s not shot as wildly as previous films but it’s well represented here regardless. You also get a theatrical trailer and the required reading liner notes.